Recruited in November 1973 to help form AC/DC, but fired in 1974, Mr. Burgess is now remembered as a founding member of the legendary rock band and one of the pioneers who paved the way for rock 'n' roll.
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You know, It's a bit unique how every type of adaptation of Sherlock Holmes has a bit of a different fandom than the other ones (the ACD adaptations, the anime/manga ones, the BBC one or the Elementary one)
Like, some things stay the same/similar but at the same time some ships, ideas or au's are unique/more common to only one or more fandoms.
And it's sort of fun to try to use a ship/au from one fandom in another. (I'll use the ACD Sherlock Holmes as an example as I'm most familiar with it.)
鈥or example the Mycroft/Lestrade ship, that mostly originated/spread because of BBC Sherlock, and imagining how the rat-like inspector that is annoyed with Holmes solving crime with his wacky (by Victorian standards) methods and the fat British man who likes solitude and quiet formed a relationship.
鈥r the Watson is actually Moriarty au/theory that if I remember correctly spawned from the BBC adaptation.
The amount of angst. The fact that Holmes slowly realised that this mysterious professor, the man who quietly and discreetly started to create a criminal empire and the man who, after deciding that Holmes might be a serious risk to the operation, arranged a few carriage incidents and other things that should have killed him is the same as his dear friend Watson, the man who complimented his methods and called them brilliant, the man who often helped him on cases, willingly and gladly, and the man who lives with him in 221B Baker Street.
"Was Moriarty truly that great of an actor and manipulator? What did he want to accomplish by doing this?" Is the main questions that I imagine would plague Holmes right after such a revelation.
鈥r maybe take the au in a more humour/less angst oriented direction. Maybe Moriarty!Watson was planning on doing Holmes in. And maybe due to some cosmic coincidence he did accept the offer to live with the detective... But now that he knows Holmes more, he can't quite find it in himself to kill the man who might be a danger to his criminal endeavours. Maybe even through all those cases that he assisted the blasted detective, his grand plan of crime became less appealing. Or maybe he's forced to rely on Holmes because someone took his crime empire from him and shot him, injuring him. Watson still writes and documents his and Sherlock's adventures, but I imagine that the fact that Holmes isn't knowledgeable in the slightest about astronomy weirdly seems to come up a lot.